by BiGG » Thu 19 May 2005, 11:26:24
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('baldwincng', 'I')t is possible to take natural gas and use it in a fuel cell to make heat and electricity. Having said that, given that it is also possible to set fire to natural gas in a domestic CHP unit to get heat and electricity, why bother?
It is also possible to take natural gas and build a chemical plant the size of a small country and convert the natural gas into a relatively clean form of diesel, then mix it with ordinary dirty diesel and use it in vehicle engines.
Given that you can run vehicles on natural gas, why bother?
It is also possible to travel west from Los Angeles to New York
There is no end of utterly pointless things that can be done.
I think you are kinda missing the whole point here! Starting with a few quotes from the
linked article ……………….
"The cell would provide homes with a clean and cheap form of energy that produces significantly lower carbon dioxide emissions than conventional fossil fuels."
“It can be powered by natural gas as well as hydrogen and
does not need platinum as a catalyst”
"The system will create CO2 savings of 30 to 50 per cent, even allowing for some CO2 being produced by the fuel cell running on natural gas."
That alone is
HUGE not to mention ……
Hydrogen is the third most abundant element on the earth's surface, where it is found primarily in water (H²O) and organic compounds. It is generally produced from hydrocarbons or water; and when burned as a fuel, or converted to electricity, it joins with oxygen to again form water.
Hydrogen is produced from sources such as natural gas,
coal, gasoline,
methanol, or
biomass through the application of heat; from bacteria or algae through photosynthesis; or by using electricity or sunlight to split water into hydrogen and oxygen.
A fuel cell that does not need platinum and can run on hydrogen with a CO2 savings of 30 to 50 per cent pointless? What?
"The Stone Age did not end for lack of stone, and the Oil Age will end long before the world runs out of oil" ............ Former Saudi Arabian oil minister Sheikh Zaki Yamani,